Meanwhile, Prime Minister Mindaugas Sinkiavicius sees no need for additional investigations on this matter. "Lithuania will fully implement the ECtHR decision," said BNS spokesperson for the Minister of Justice Božena Zaborska-Zdanovič. Earlier, BNS reported that last week the ECtHR awarded Saudi citizen Abd al-Rahim Hussein al-Nashiri €30,000 for unlawful detention in a CIA prison in Lithuania and required the authorities to seek guarantees from Washington that the man would not face the death penalty. President Gitanas Nausėda previously stated in an interview with BNS that court decisions must be implemented, but further consultation is needed regarding the obligation to approach the U.S., as such an appeal might appear as interference in American internal affairs. Zaborska-Zdanovič indicated that the appeal to the U.S. would be made "through diplomatic channels," but did not provide further details. She also noted that the latest ECtHR decision would not be appealed to the Grand Chamber of the court, but despite this, it would come into force in a few months and would only be implemented then. Meanwhile, Prime Minister Mindaugas Sinkiavicius stated on Wednesday that he sees no need to further clarify the circumstances of the alleged CIA prison in Lithuania two decades ago. "A parliamentary investigation has already been conducted in Lithuania. Law enforcement agencies are also conducting a pre-trial investigation coordinated by the Prosecutor General's Office. The Prime Minister sees no need for additional actions," Sinkiavicius's press secretary Gyadas Saliga conveyed to BNS. Nausėda also stated that he sees no need to further clarify the circumstances of the alleged prison. In 2009, the Seimas Committee on National Security and Defense conducted a parliamentary investigation but stated that it did not establish the fact of transporting detainees from the CIA to Lithuania, although it acknowledged that conditions for this existed. The Prosecutor's Office confirmed on Wednesday that it continues the investigation initiated in 2010 and renewed in 2015 regarding the CIA prison, but indicated that it has not received significant data from the U.S. and other partners to whom it sent requests for legal assistance. The ECtHR decision last week was the third of its kind in cases against Lithuania. As the ECtHR has already established in multiple cases that such a prison operated in Lithuania, representatives of the country's authorities consistently emphasize that this court relies on the opinions of human rights organizations and investigations conducted by them, rather than by official institutions. After one of the unfavorable ECtHR decisions for Lithuania regarding the prison, the Ministry of Justice commented two years ago that during the pre-trial investigation, Lithuania could not refute the conclusion that the prison operated with objective data or evidence. The ECtHR first made such a conclusion in 2018, stating that a secret CIA prison operated in Lithuania from 2005 to 2006, where Saudi citizen Abu Zubaydah was held. In January 2024, the ECtHR awarded €100,000 for the unlawful detention of Saudi citizen Mustafa al-Hawsawi. In ECtHR cases, Lithuania provided explanations that the facilities in Antaviliai, near Vilnius, were not a prison but a support center for intelligence. The country claims that the suspicious aircraft delivered not people but communication equipment to Lithuania.